. ~IDtlldiaU. J tlttt!l1U~P·r ---~::.~~~;---Jl-~(;e~"~~Ci~~ 0a0~pda:r~ei~d:~·'s;~f-io~r;0~0·s~-hr.~:_a~~:~£f~.~l. ~::::;---~~:~~~~i-o~:.e~a~~~:=i~dis~~n~-~;;~~~:~~~;::_ c:::r ~Q.R11-U:ave~ ~ 5 The Home. si::oonful~ over the t~mt. On th~s place the Scotland. He is at preHent having a short guishecl preacher of the E'ree Church of WEDNESDAY, JU IJ.Y 18, 1888 other portion of t e cake, which must be covered witb. bD.na! a and sugar ; pour the · d f th ·r eam over the t op and rema.m er o e " sides and serve im uiediately. Use a silver k "f ' l" t i b Th' "p m,_e to is rthx"ck eCI e t s ICe· i11 " snana.s. th rusts are ma1<esh two P;tes, "" w"lelk ceep f or several enong o sp 1l , aur1 1 d 'f t fill d ays i no e · · MocK CREAM P1in.-Bake two crusts on one plate by putting flour between,. so that they will separate when done; you can keep these several days, When you want a pie make a pint of m ock cream, with one pint of milk, one egg, t wo tablespoonfuls of corn starch, a little saH, lemon or nutmeg for spice. Cook well. When cold fill the crusts just before you serve it. Lay the top piece on over the under evenly, as you will find it almost impossible to move it u.fter it is filled. MELISSA'S SlIORTCAKE.-Onequart of pre: pared flour, half a cupf u 1 of butter, one "lk. even teaspoonful of salt, two cups of m1 Sift the salt with the flour, chop in the butter until you have yellow dust, wet with the milk and roll out with as little handling as possible half an inch thick. Ilake in broad, shallow pa".'!S well greased. W hen done cut into squares, split and butter while hot and send at once to the table. holiday in the S ta.tes and may very likely finish off, like the most of old country visitors, by spending the ha.If of an afternoon i"n Canada. He is writing his impressions in the "'cotch p"pers and thi·s i ' s how lie t~.lls cf "' " ' his experiences in an interview with President Cleveland · ,The President received ua most kindly, and gave us full t en minutes of that time which is the most precious of all things to men in his positi.on. At nest his appearance is not prepossessing. ifo is of heavy make, and his fe<ttures do not r elieve his bulky form, being, like t he rest of him, large and common-like. I should fancy, too, tho.t his mind moves slowly as his body would, which distinguish~s him from other American statesmen. At least such of them as I have met are brisk a.nd nimble, and also voluble. Mr. Cleveland seems to me a ma.n who will only speak when he has something to say, ·11 a 1so t a k e time · t o th" an d w1 mk - b ef ore h e · · d, I acts; b ut, h avmg ma.d e up h" 1s mm should expect him to stick to it. What. ever he be, he is not a weak man, and ' he needs strong will to stand where he does. Of course, our conversation was largely about America, wpat had broug ht us to it, and what we had seen of it. H e strongly recomm,ended me to go west, at lea.st as far as St. Paul's and Minne. apolis. There, he said, I cc.uld see the intensity and energy of life here far better · " b h e t h ough t than h in any eastern · · ::;ta.te 1· ;l ut f M t ey were gomg JU&t a 1tt c too ast. r. 0 !eveJau d h as not L" Jn ·s h omel y h umour, mco h l f · h' and yet ere was a touc l nt un In is ,_ t h somewuat eavy f ace w h en h e told me h h l · l h b d h t hat, t oug t 1er0 is oi1 y t e reii. t , t h e river · between th em, S t. p anl's o, vexes Minneapolis. and Minner.pulis en· vies St. Paul's. When the minister of the latter t own chose to pr14ach at Minneapolis from oue of St. Paul's Epia~lea, his hearers rose from their pews indignant at the idea of St. P.mt's sending letters to them ; an?, on the other hand, when Minnesota built a house for its " Exhibition " in sixty days, St. Paul's next year resolved to erect a. big. ger one still, and did it in for ty days. I expressed my regret that my time would not allow me to visit either of these west ern cities, but that if I ever was ther e I would be careful to avoid "St. Paul's Epistles." Altogether our visit to the W hite House was very agreeable, very informal, and probably quite as edifying as a presentation at St. James. Mrs. Cleveland had gone to visit a friend in the country. 'Ve were sorry not to see her, ll.S by all accounts she is a most charming lady : and some of his opponents go so far as to say that if he is re-elected t o the Presidency it will be largely owing to her. Whether there be any ~~~~l!~~::i~ ~! ~~v~e~~yec;~:~·y~~- ,?ne I have """'" :!i!llllm!llfi~'tl1m11!lm.~~~'llL~~1!1.WiDitio~W.iil~W:Wai~~~ If called upon to give the most signific11.nt monosyllable in our language, it is not doubted bu~ t hat by unanimous voice it 'S he '1.'1·ied in vain to Get would be Home, Its mention invariably ictures in the mind the old homestead, be ReJicC and bnd quite P it a cottage in a village street, or a mansion in the midst of ample· grounds and costly Giv~n up all Dope. environments. , 'Vho does nob revere the home of his Ca mpbellford, June 9, 1887. childhood, and all the 1;>lea.sant things that MR. E. MORRIS, Toronto, clustered a bout the family roof "in the days of a.uld lanf! syne," even to the pictures DEAR Sm :-I feel it my duty to give on the wall, the old arm-chair and the great you my testimony for the good _ l. had overgrown family bible that rested with !l'rom your Dandelion L~ver and K idney folded covers in its allotted place. There, '.Bitters. My liver was m a bad staye a~d too, was the little flower garden, with its I WM a. great sufferer. I ~ad ~nod m neatly kept beds of merrigolds, pinks, irain to get relief and had quite given up pansies and bachelor buttons, with here and 11 hope, till a friend told me of yo ur there a flowering rose bush that defied the 11 .'.Bitters. I got a bottle at once and I am winter snows. We seem to see,them now, "tt d new wo as we saw them years af!o, and to rel.lize 1 ·." '""PPY to say t h e B 1 ere ma 0 a - mol'e than ever that we shall never cease to ~ d re_commen love the picture, for it steals upon the mem:m an of me . I can h eartily_ hr · them to any one troubled wit iver com- ory with the freshness of spring days that · renew the verdure of the fields and fill the · ,plaint. Yours t ruly CARRIE STEPHENS, world with rejoicing. - - -- -- - - - . , . - - -- - - "Be it ever so humble there's no place Good .News at Home. like home"- no place that in the same de· gree rewards the care that is bestowed E. MORRIS, E sQ.,-DEAR Srn,-1 h~v 3 upon -it, for the h ome is the nursery of the reason to speak well of your Dandelion noble and greti.t among the races of men. The Work Basket. Livct' and Kidney B itters. I havt.'. been We oannot do too much for our homes. Evel'y well chosen orna.ment within doors L F m S . bl 1 t.roubled for Rome time with my Kidney and every shrub or flower that lends oors <OR .1.oWEJ,s,- ervicea e oops cotton tape h a lf aninch and a friend of mine recommended them its beauty to the garden or the maybema.delbytaking · · h d d 1 1 sew 'to me and l tried them in my case, and lawn, is an educator and sheds upon n width, doub e it, turn .1n t e en an run it all around ; the .;found tl1em to work like a charm ; there- the Nhole household a refining influence over and over, or If b out two me · h es and a 1 1 oop should be a 'ferc I have much pleasure in recommend- which is felt in all the years to come. Who h· . la 1 and be eecnre ing them to all pers?ns ~ho ·are t roubled has not read "Picciola," and shared with Ion~, d h the ends 'dshould f h h y st1tc f hto t e under Bl e o t e top em o t e the unfortunate captive his solicitude, for e towel. fo any way with their K i dney. the companionship of the humble little Your s truly, rlant that pushed its way above the rocky A N EW l'ABLE SPREAD.- A l arge spread J. J. Jo::ms. pavement of his prison yard, and who has recently executed was of unbleached Canton Newtonville, May 3, 1887. not felt at some period of his life a like in- flannel, used with the twilled side upperterest_in some frail charge committed to his most. The design was a rayed clematis, care a.ud upon whose well being some dear leaves and t endrils, and the '. stitch employed (Jcmsumptio~!_m·ely ()u rcd. hope was entertained? was buttonhole stitch. This stitch ho.a been We have known pllrsimonious men in csti- discovered t o be very useful in covering T o THE EDITOR : ma.ting the cost of living to reckon the large surfaces, the stitches being placed only l'leuse inform yom readers that I have interest on the money value of the family close enough together to p~eserve the color a positive remedy for the a bove muned homestead, as if thi.s sacred spot was capable of the embroidery against 1 he ground. ilisease. By its timely use thousa.uds of r·f being figured out in dollars u.nd cents. E'lax thread is also recommended for this liopeless cases ,have been· permanently ~nred. I shall be glad to send two bottles As well might a sum be set upon a wite's work. The ordina.ry rule by which the new devotion or the love of children. There buttonhole stitch is worked is t hat the dis<lf my rmedy FREE to _any of V?ur readers has been erected in the park of an Americrn ta.nee between them must very nearly equal who hne comumption if they will send IDE\ oity a statue of Howard Paine. Other the depth of the stitches. thefr 'Express and ·p, 0 . address. . Dc8rl!:l~8. -Pieces of cheese cloth make Re~pectfully, Dr. T. A . SLOCUM, 37 statutes have been erected there in honor of men of greater renown, but of none whose the very best of dusters . . Hem the edges 'Y onge Street, Tol'onto, Ont. single achievement has found such affection· and have a large supply. More economica.1 ate rooting in the bosoms of the young. and just as useful dusters may be made of the little ones that gather about it, all old soft print ; pie~es torn into squar e shape AIWICE TO MoTHERS.-Are you <lilt· '.l'o that need to be t old them is that ·this is the and hemmed ; then they will not get mislaid tnrbed at· night and broken of ~our r~st image of the man who wrote the song of and torn, by a sick child suffering and crying with " Home, Sweet Home." GLOVES.-The first rip in a glove should pain of Cutting Teeth ? If so send at It is because the home is always sacred, be mended at once, ueing a very fine needle .once a:nd get a bottle ·of ".Mrs. Winsl?w'e and forms an ineffaceable picture in the and sewing silk for this purpose. A tear Soothing Syrup." For children . teeth~ng, mind, tha.t we urge its sanotifioation by is no1J so easily r epaired. First work around its value is incalculable. It will relieve every available means. Nothing which adds the edges in button hole stitch, then draw A Dozen Facts in Science. the poor little sufferer immediately.. De· to its comfort. in a materfo.l sense, or to its these stitches together in the centre, working ' s 1"q Lightning can be seen by reflection a dis. p end . upon it, mothers ; there is n n adornment in a purely resthetic relation, Over and Ovcr. If · tlli · done neatly the "![ h ardi V b e not ic " ed · tauce of ~00 miles. · mistake about it, It cures Dysentery should be neg1ected. A single inexpensive t ear WI According to Pasteur and Chamberland and Diarrhcea, regulates tl~e Stomach anc1 but graceful picture in the living room, a THE THIRST FOR GOLD, ~ typhoid bacillus is in ninety-nine cases out BDwels cures Wind Coho, softens _th e stand of hardy fl.owers in a window are not of a hundred communicated through drink· G ums 'reduces Inflammation, and g1ve.i without their educational as well as inspira· Humanity's l'ec:nllar rassion WhicJa ing water. :to:ie ~nd energy to the. whole sy~tem. tional value, Such ·too are the harbingers health, the warders of disease and oftenValues Wealth A.bove Happiness. It has been stated that railway trains in ~· lr\Ir,. Winslow's Soothmg Syrup ~for of times the forerunners of refinements which England ai·e now driven at an aver..ge speed cllildren teething is pleasant to the taste l · can see a lovely valley Nature · "tua1· spin ize the h .im blest l" ives and open the had gathered into her lap all where her wealth of 14 per cent. higher than it was twenty years ia11 d is the prescription of one of the old· ieet and best female physicians and nurses way to higher levels of thought and action. scenery and soil ; all her rivers of jewels and ago, with scarcely more thi.n half th.e quanThere is much truth i the homely aphor· purple-clad mountains, where the castles ot tity of coal. ' In the United States, and is for sale by ism, ".All work and no play makes Jack a the nobles above and the homesteads of the A workman in the Carson Mint has dis.all druggists through the world. P1ice dull boy." Children should be provided peasants below and abroad presided over covered that drill points heated to a cherry 25 cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for with the means of amusing themselves in peace a~d plenty amid eternal Spring. red .and tempered by being driven into a ·" 'MRS. WINSLOW'S -SOOTHING SYRUP." suitable ways, and almost any innocent way One day while digging a ditch o. lump of bar of lead will bore throng!:_ the hardest :and take no other kind. is suitable. You cannot begin this t oo gold was turned up ; pursuing the search, a steel or plate glass without perceptible early, nor continue it too late. Playing mine was reve,led. The news of the dis- blunting. cards are often objected to ..a implements of ~overy overran the va.lley like an e{lidemic . According to a Chica.go philosopher flies gambling, but so a.re wheat . and fl.our and Rich and poor were soon employed digging are revivified souls of blossoms which fall hol'ses, and even men in tests of endurance up the eoil. Tb.e noble allowed his castle to to the ground, decay, and come foriih flies. sometimes coarse and brutalizing. Bui fall into .ruin and his pa.rk tO run into a There is no such poetry about the origin of 'Wben :Br.by was aick, we gave her C11.11torta, aside from cards there o.re various indoor wilderness. The peasant left his fallow to the flea, for his mother is sawdust, mainly Whe'.n ahe was a Child, she cried fer Castoria, amusements to which no rea.sona.ble objec· dig in the mountain side. Rivers ran dry, fine sawdust, '"'v:heu ahe becawe lliae, ahe clung to ·castoria, tion can be made. By all mea.ns encournge for the waters were diverted into finmee to Dr. W', A. McCorn, of the New York seasonable outdoor exeroiees, and do not be wash the golden dirt. Woods were 014t down City .Asylum for the Insane, has fonnd 'Wli® ehe had Children, ehe gave them C1utoria, ala.rmed at a little boisterousness. A he.. rty to furnish sheds to support the undermined hyoscymine, sub-cutaneously administered, ringing laugh indicates a healthy c<>ndition. ea.rth. The fields were mottled with great a very useful remedy in quieting mania, You will never hear it trom the pale ..nd molehills and holes, and the speckled face of and attended with less unpleasant sympsickly offspring of Dllme Propriety who Nature revea.led where the goldpox had left toms than are chloral or the bromides. stands ready to check the least naturalness its ft.thy trace. '!.'he rich bece.me poor and Electricity is to be enlisted in the investi. in her little old men and women. There is the poor reveled in their halls. Vuli:(arity gation of the purity of water. The vol· indeed nothing on earth so near heaven and pretense ruled in the castle, while the tameter fails to show any current passin'( o.s. a ~ittl~ chi!d. who has been suffered to re- noble begged at his own ga.te. The idiot sat through chemically pure water. As saline llE SCIENCE OFLIFE, ~a.ID its simplicity a~d n1;1:turalness. Pet an· in the magisterial chair 11;nd the vile women, or acid contamination increases the conthe great medical work or the age on Manhood, 1mals are a great delight t o _the young.. l'he Espousing the buffoon, moupted th~ th:rnne, dl!c.:Hvity pf th<l me<Jlnn1 g~ows ~reater. ?are bestowed upon them is never 'Ylt~Otlt 11nd they r~ceived tht' homiigctlW." tt,; seuluis. J , !.£ .. h "ilOti - , · .. { Nervous and Physical De· its reward ,as the oft told tales of their fa\l!ll, 1 t:iu ona1 is the n ame o !I new y., · c b illty, Prem. a ture. Decline, ity and in~tinct that ~~elll~ 11\du t-0 reason- · . - -. --~---. ~sed to p~od;ice ~le<o~. The average dpae Errors of Youth, and· the amply testify. Only the vic!ous or na.turD11,nng £ngmeermg Feat -Renewmg m the begmnmg l~ f:hCeell gra.!n~, wl~1ch ·untold miseries confequent tho Niagara Suspension B"idge. may be ?ra.dttally increa~ecl to aix.y ~rams, ally cruel would indulge in their abuse a.ne thereon, 30Q paRes, 8 vo..1 !Z5 to such their oom ' niouabi l lcl bd It promises t o he especially useful m tile ")lrescdptions for all diseases. Ol<ltjl, full gUt, 1 denied ' p.\ P s iou '.!'he Niagn,rs. Falls railway suspension t reatment of mental disordern. · 4,?E..!Y $!: !!J. m11il. eea.le~. Illustrative Ba'?il!~ 1 r - ' .. : , brtdga carded successfully a heavy traffic 11 l · I · · h Id -:",./~ ·" · -rre~fo. :i ,ll~ung ~. · nrt -u::1qgJ9 &!l'sd.-~~!' .-'. Be~ ~n ~ W0i-('f, hi t.hil llitll!lot!l!J or W~t\h\Ver 11oge ±or 26 vears · , it was then found t hat some The sma est c ectric pant; m t c WOl' "" :rtl"'." "·"-l'e<l .. d!lo1 av> " ar"ea i. j on, t.ie i, 4 ·now. '[h · Old , lh· · 'i\ ;:.e . ". Or $,at btitre shou1 d b e f!111. de ihe reTiairs" to the cable were required . a t the is what is claimed for.the one a.t the Morton onal _Medical .AMcni- dearest· sweet~s~ p'a"e on earth It is · d cl Honse, New York. It consists of a Corliss to the uut.hcr oy the N0.t1 ;atJon.. ~\ddreas P.. 2· Box 18Qo, Boato:i , Mass., ' . v " · · "' ' ' anchornge. 'l'hese repairs were ma e, an engine, Edison dynamo, shafting, pulleys, - "'"'Vl' Dn.. w . H.'PAn'KEJ;i.. pad\lat.!l of Hanrard indeed the 9fiield of honora.n~ the sa~ctuary the n.nchora.ge was substantially reinforced, incandescsnt lights, etc. I t is incloscd in a · ;f;tedieal College, 21'.1 )leam 111·ac! loe in Bo\\ton, of love, Tbmk not that anything which adds At the sa.me time it was found that the woodcl f 'who·?JJay'01\ consulte.(l. confidcn\W,ll:i,c· Spemalty to its enjoyment is wMited. N 0 inveatmont t'lll suspended superstructure was in bad gl ass case 3 feet long, I~ feet wi e l\nd 2 eet :m~eases of Man. Office. No. 4 nlflnch St· yields euch prncious returns, aince neither condition, and this was entirely removed and hi¥,h· . . .,. d f th th To detect t he les-kage of gas, Dr. B unte, th e 1eve au d gmt im e '6··f e young, nor e replaced by a structure of iron, built and ad S · th o oId ; 6.re cap- JUated in such a manner as to secure the best in t he Canadian Magazine oif cience, dougpeace an d content ment ·o bl f b · t" t '1 "' t h d"d 1 · ges ts the use of pa.per dipped in palla ium a · e o emg es una ec i.;y 'o ao1· i va ues possible results. For some time it had -Nervous Debility, Seminal Losses and prema.· that obtain in the marli:.ti'n places. been noticed that the atone towers which chloride solution, Such paper ch anges its .tureD~cay. Jll'Q<JlilPllY and permanently cured by "How beautiful i a home I i'he wanderer sees, d h t bl f tl b -d color in the presence of gas ooming from supporte t e grea f ci> n th gc lea.l"s i'mpei·cepti "ble by the odor, and which Retu rniag from afar, the village spire, h d "d d" 131 · es t o t "le t 3 owe And the ancestl'al roof, whose aged trees evi ences 0 i n egra ion a e pio<luce no effect upon t he earth covering . Shelter perchance, wife, mother, child and sire, surface, and a careful engineering exa.m· the pipes. Kot their's the glory to which fools a·pire. ination in 1885 showed thD.t these towers - - - - - -- -- The empty bauble, vainly ""lled Renown ; were in a really dangerous condition. 'Does not lnte~fere with Diet or u~ua.l occupa. They are content to light the evening flre, h h h ddl The Bell That " Tolls the Knell of Partinir . 'tioll and fully restores lost vigor and insures To feast on simple cheer, and Jay them down The reason for t is was t at t e sa es perfect m&Bhood. Sent to any address. post· In joyous rest, to draam. unfearioi; fortune's frown. " over whieh the cables pass on the top of Day." paid on recW.vt or price· Onll, Donar per box. the towers had not the freedom of mo· Tl1e curfew is said to have been introduc· Sole' age'nc:lf, SCHOFIELD'S DRUG STORE, tion which was required for the action of ed into E ngla.nd by William the Conqueror. ll:t11g str·1et, Toronto. Collected Reoipes. the ca.b~es, caused by differences of tern By that monarch it was ordained, under ee· CRISPs.-One cup of molasses, one and pera.ture and by passing loads. vere penalties, when the curfew bell rang at one·ha.lf teaspoonful of sa.leratus; smooth all A most interesting and successful feat 8 o'clock in the evening all lights and firea lumps out of this soda, then beat with the was accomplished in the substitution of should be extinguished, There are those molasses until all of a foam ; now add one· iron towers for these stone towers, with- who hold that this was merely the enforcing hslf teacupful of melted lard or butter, one- out interrupting the traffic across the of an existing o.nd very common polioe reghalf teaspoonful of salt, one teaspoonful of bridge. Thia has been accomplished ulation to that affect. The absolute prohi· ginger and one cup of sifted fl.our, beat very recently by building a skeleton iron bition of lights after the ringing of the curwell together; then add one cup of sour tower outside of the stone tower, and few bell was abolished by Henry I., in the milk (buttermilk is better if obtainable) and transferring the cables from the stone to year llOO but the praotioe of tolling a bell more flour until it is very ha.rd, roll out as the iron tower by a most ingenious sr- at a fixed hour in the evening was continued thin as possible and cut, and then bake in rangement of hydraulic jacks. The stone and thie, whiJh ir. still extant ir. some places, a quick oven until brown. towers were then removed, Thus, by is a survival of the curfew of medireval DELICIOUS CHOCOLATE CAKE.-One cup the renewal of its suspended structur times. .At first the common hour was 7 white sugar, one-half cup of butter, two cnps and the replacing of its towers, the bridge o'clock, then it was gradually advanced to of flour, one-half cup of sweet milk. Whites has been given a new lease of life and is in 8, and in some places to 9 o'clock ; indeed, , ·, ,,. . , of three eggs beaten to a froth, one· half tea.- excellent condition to-day. in Scotland, 10 o'clock was not an unusual . , spooaful of soda, one teaspoonful of cr1>am This Niagara rail way suspension bridge hour. Tho curfew was a regula.tion most Or the Lfl(~'rjHlibit. Jlo·ithrely C,urecl tartar; w1?ites o! eggs ~dded last. Bake in ho.s been so long in successful operation that useful in those early days, when it was the by~, Admin sterin3' n ....:.J{aine· · two long tms' with fillings between and on it is difficult now to appreciate the general oustom to pla.ce the fire in a hole in the r.;. QpJ4.en. Speci,frn. ·neon be~ii: . ·;· · ·ln'p;ic.1'P o:i c?.rreeo~ tea. ,withon· top._ · disbeliet in the possibility of its succese as a middle ot the floor, under an opening in the t.l1eknow!ol<l.i ,tliepe~snn taking It, l\Ja'bsoiutely Filhng.-Three-fourths cup of grated cho· railway bridge, when it was undertaken. roof, to allow the escape of smoke. Whe11 h11.rmlens, a il\ i!!Thct "'petm~).)enf;and speedy . cure, whcth · e patient ls a moderate drinker or ' colate, one cup of white sugar, yolks of three It wa.s projected and executed by the late the family retired for the night, the fire an o.lcoholi<Ur.zcok._It.ha.s been slven in thousands ·eg"s · twu. tablespoonfuls of sweet milk · Jo . hn .A. Roehling. Befor . e it was finished, was extinguished by covering it up ; hence Of cases, and in every lnstaue..ei a perfect cnre P '· b. · · ·· has followed, 1J'r~veif !ffl!16< \!"?"~stem. once.. )m,l.X. ma as.m, an.d r2et ~ll pot water to sea.Id R<!bert Stephenson aaid to him, "If your the t'lrm couvrefeu, or curfew. The regulmprei;no.ted wttll.tllii Sf>eciftc, It becd es .an "tter (while ca.I.... 1s bakm~ · ) stir often flavor with bridge succeeds, mine [the Victoria. tubulat lmpossibH~t for the liquor appetite to exist, F or , "'?' · ·· · lation was also serviceable in obliging the circular a .. fnlld·artlcul11,1;&··~d..fres~ ~Olo'P;!J:!ll ~an1lla, le~. cool unt thick enough to spread brid2e at Montreal] is a ma.gnificent blun· women to keep in their houses, &nd thus 1 11 BPEC11·~1 ,;c,~~i,~~R,a~stti:7· ~':,l~h"f.",o· · gqo~. ·, ' . . · . der. The Niagara bridge did succeed.- preventing night bra.wls in the s ~reet. It is believed there is no historical authority for m1t:~lJ:']t· "'ftr1~-.: u -rrJ:";:-... 1:,,.,_...,, CRE,AMif1E~ -Qne and. one.hQ.l{ .CUJ!S po~- Scribner'6 .M. __ a_ ua _z _in _e _ . --- - - . · ~.\\ltt'll . . IS · v.im 1 .lllSU:W!i, · .1 ·l ·dei;~d ~ug~r, two eggs, piece butter size of a . , the popular tradition that the severity ex· Dhwag_ol'Ie~: .~he.ann<!unceI_D.e11t.thal walnut; one cup aweet milk, two· teaapoons SoJl!e~hat Ambiguous. hibited by the Conqueror, In enforcing obe· the Pres~d ~ hJB wif.fln.li t!JlgJ>ff: ~q", a , ,c,re~~tq ar, one teaspoon saleratua, three Deau,_ Burgon, of Chichester, was recently dience to the curfew, was most particularly few days , ~ ! ~1J'l1..cp,i~ Jw; · cups-SI{, fl.our. Cream, butter and sugar; speaking on the nature of man as distinguish- designed to prevent the E nglish from assemJ>roves '.'.P! . ,~\.)t,J:'}'.\la1,1her« J!lf\dthee _ ,s and be'}t_thoro'!lgbly. P~~ in the_ eq,fro~ the lower.orders of ore!'tion·. " Mo.n," bling in secret to plan schemes of rebellion 1 Pei;dlet. @,JJ~o~ 1:p1~rv.e th11· ·111~ite):c t _two Ja.rge s~~fulf, a.n$l~ptlr in he· remarked, " 1s a progressive bemg; the 11gsinst their Norman lords. t·citurn1 1 a> -SUc&lal!ful"fi~hmg 1 ' ~011-l;:J'n h1ch you-"ha 4'fte8. the .cream o~ers are stii.tionary. Think, for example, E~idently ent thinks mo~a of"fii tartar. isso!ve th~s ih tlf'e rest 'of the of the ass I Always and everywhere it is A bill" to prevent the gathering of wild wife than, c~U .~ . · ii ii<d~at,; ,,mi . "!,¥: J.nd dd th.~ . l~t. thing, ~ake)n two, ,the sam~ ' creature, and you never .saw o.nd flower~" has, fo~ some unknown reason, ,as ev_ery · :Ym~1¥n1gh; il~rti~;. , round· tins; When wanted, never 'W'ill see a more perfect Miii than yo· 1been introduced mto Pull.ment by Mr. -tor him, ~ ~;~;~~~.' ~~t'··t the cake~ ~d cover the lower llOQ a~ the preaent moment I '~ IShaw Lefevre. I~ .,tl.. ~~~ f\!! -f·t+,-,,. ,,..A~ (j, i:i IL~ Ill V G~.. lr' ~ ·dO fdtpOttff. [ C:::'2G · !~ronic r~ . ,'.lstiveness ;rnd o.11 · omplai nts - - -- c · c onstipation, A~idity Q · T H Q S· p Cleanen, Dieil, Pressed and 'opaired by B:. ;. a:.J"' u 1' AT -- ~. -Dyer and Clothes C!e11.ner. ' G a oo s warran te d t o b e as no r.ue will know tbcm from new when ·lono. Corner of King a nd Ontano Streota Bowmanvillc. ' ' v sr:< ·w fnnn n clisorclorPd state of the L iver, sw.. 1ach ""d llowcls, ·uch "" Y'y~pe.psia or Jndig estion, Eilim1s Jl:il'Action.s1 of the StomLoss of Appetite, Gravel, Hel\dache, HcaEtburu, M h, J~henmatism, To Farmers and Thrashers I "\f --o-- :t-7crvotts Dcbilitr, Nausea, or Vomiting, &c. CnrLniml'J I.IKE rr! :::\far:inms Lnci:: i ·r! Bf'cnusc 1\;l nfwn, :1ds w it ho11t gri 1·i 1 ) ....., is c<~ rtain i11 its eif;\cts, and i R (;fr'ccti vc i u lil u ll closes. IN LIQUID FORM. I~argc Hi s aµ-r ceable to t he t:1st.I", du('s n1)t OC<Jt!sion C. ROGERS' Silver Street, Bowmanville, Bottles, 2 5 cents ca.ch. a ~l'ffj!]IBlftiij!Hl;!llilB·'MlllKIRlililiWil~ A POOR MAN'S FRIEND. friend is P ERRY One thll.t w ill mvc dn:vs of sickness n.nd mn.ny o.Dollu.rin time rwd lJoulor's Ui!b , ono ttl wn ;;·s nea.r a,t hand, ready a.ta 111omeut's ca.11 . Th is DAVIS' n;v ~pcp sia or .Tu<ligesti on, Sudden Colds, SorQ '1'hroat, Co ugi1~ , . .(;.-c.. USED EXTEf\XALLY, i t cures J3rui8es, Cuts, .B urns. ~c nid~ :; nd Spntl..u.(;'. /'.)we llin:rs f> I the :Joi nt~ . 'l'oor.hnc l!e, Puiu in l"iw Pnce , N<~n rnlf!ia :1.n tl Hhf'lnn:1ti~1 11 . ~ ;i'j .. fSo ](lby J) £<alers in ]\ar.ily ~l udie:i i1 u3 Ll!O \ \/ uriJ. Around. 25 CENTS PoR BOTT LE. S tourncli, Bowe l Comp i ni n t ~, P a.in tflr 1s Col i c, TA KEN I"l\TERNAJ,LY. i t cures Dysentery, Cli<1Je ri11 l?inrrhcen-. Crn.mp anrt J>ain in the .Gcwr.rc of Co<rntcrfeits aml Imil110o11s. ~£1~1!!7~~ THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER. Is the cheapest place t o buy a Steam Thi eshing Machine ; or a No. 1 Steel Binder-somethmg new but thoroughlv tested, 800 working last year ; a new Double Speed Mower-the be st in t he market ; a H orBe Rake that a 5year-c ld boy can dump ; 4 kinds of Seu ::::':-;n. . . cheap ; Sulky Plows, Twin ana Smg:ib Plows ; a new kind of Dian.. ond Harrows ; Honey Fanning Mills ; Spring 'I'odh Cultivators and H arrows ; Farm ens ~kales ; Horse . Forks ; :::5heaf Slings; Machine 'Uil and Binder Twine. Farmere call and inspect before pl c.::ing your orders. Dr. CHANNING'S Compound Extract o f Pure Red Jmnaica C. ROGERS. TO BE SARSAPARILLA L iver and ~plcen, Rhenmatic Affedions, di seases of the Kidneys, Bbdder a11d Urinary Orgttns, opprcssiou a of the Cllci;t or Lungs, L cucorrhca, Ca.tarrh, nud all clit5cases resultin g from a de.. praved a.n(l impure coudition of the lJlooa. For the cur n of Scrofltla, Sal t R h eum, Cancer, all Skin Diseases, 'l'mnon:, E nlargement of the CA. Tl:L'ION.-A.. ~k fo1· "Dr. Cltanni11.o '·· HUNG! --o -3000 rolls of fine Davis & Lawrence Co., Limited, SOLE AGENTS, M OR AFTER DINN "- rl PILLS, · fm· Pllf(~chh~d ili(~f"\5;:f. in11 , proT ABLETS dne[' d fr o:n '":~ !it Gf 1_ 1 n)j1C'r - - -- - - - s ccrution (Jf t11c Ga~:;t.J'i <..: ,fui :::c. They gjve irn.n)C'lli.a.te r<~1 iP,fiu 1>yspc1> sia a1:d I11tl i:z-es 1lo.i1. T>lRECTf()NS.- TaT:f 011!'! o-r two ti iUs 1nnnedi<!~l'l.·1 c(:rr eat.i.Uf1 or f 11hen l.'·1{f"t ri11g from l11diyc:;t irm, J,11.wp i i i ' 0 1F D!GESTIVE I &Md WALI-' PAPERS just received by 1 T'hroat 01· F lbtul,'1 1c8. S:1mpli·" ~·· ut fn·f'. t;()t. J: Hy. C. Tait. --o-A fine line of ,4,4ldr1·~<.. Ht<' Davis & La\.'Jr encc Co. · (Limii.ed,) l\·loritrenf. J,,: 1,."<"i ..<, iit'A'f!l!Fi"'at~~lil.\ll'.~l~ HIND'S HONEY AND ALMOND CREAM. for <~ h.:tppert. J!nnd!i. trace :ind J.ip.~. J~o 11d\ ntHl IT:1nl Skin, Ch a!i ug. ~u:ii..ourn. Burn,;, Sc1tl·IS, Ir i~ : · i n g, <Jbtlll!:tin~. Sore !\iprle s . "Han::; ~n il...- ,' " :wcl :dl 1rn pl ~ :1 g:mt r.01H1itious or BABY CARRIAGES to choose from - -o-- ~~i1i~.k i1~.~i~~i!,·3 e~:.·~:··,~;1i;.\,}1\ r.~.tt1~ 0t11i~;. ~;:~~=~;t~<~~ibi.u one a&& THE LARGEST SCALE WORKS IN CANADA. OVER 100 STYLES OF HAY SCALES, GRAIN SCALES, FARM SCALES, TEA SCALES, PHOTOGRAPHS got up. in as good style as can be supplied in this section ., EXHAUSTED VITALITY I T I!'lea 91 IMPROVED SHOW CASES MONEY nRAWERS u t Ch ... · ·- To buy Foot Gear for Men, Women,. Boys and Maidens, at AND BUTCHERS SUPPLIES AonREss rn FULL, Write for terms. DpperS ... _..._. 1 C. WILSON ESPLANADE STREET EAST "'° R. SON, DA VJS' Popular No. 1, Boot and Shoe EMPORIUM! Our New Stock has a rrived, and com· prises something neat and pretty for Ladies, Good and Serviceable for Men and Boys, and Boots that R Boots for every member of the household, TRUNKS, VA.USES, .t:;SA.TCHEU, IN STOCK. I TORONTO , ONT. Mention this paper every time you write. 0 STANDAR. D BAJ~ I( ___ .,, -"'" , .inl n B ank l s prepare d t o d o T· J..leg It,. <Uate Banking in all its bunches, F d' t d D it armers notes iscoun e ; epos a ·eceived a.nd Interest paid on amounts of 15 upwards in Savings Bank Depart mellt; R ., · "' · C"11Hal "'aid np. 81,000,000. ~1.est. · "'2G~"oo OF CANADA . ·+RJU'a'R\"CIJlll~la+ D R A. uT S .11: [ssued and Collections ma.de In Europe lJnited States and Canada. W. J ··TONES, DAJNN'S BAKINC -SPRING- .--ordered Work and Repairing a. Specialty, as usual. D. DAVIS. . .. ... . . . . CPl!N!N& . ' ..· . · . POWDER THE C ·l\OK'S BEST FR. IEND ,· , ·NN '"··Es ·s n DRdi --o-And with its advent ! ' LADIES Your attention is directed to the immensestock of MILLINERY of every description at MRS. IVES MRS. DONNELY'S has opened out a fine new stock -ofShe has just opened out one of the large11t and most stylish stocks ever brought to town, consisting of :J Dress Silks Laces, Embroideries, 1'1illinery, Vdvets, &~., Plushes with a very fine stock of F eathers a.n~· and a lovely stock of LADIES' Fl N f UNDfRWfAR. Ladies in want of a. choice of fine Fancy Dry Goods, please give me a. call. variet y at store, opposite Barrack;;. Flo were, Call and inspect this fine display, which cannot fail to give satiafaction. BRltA Ji) made of this Ye..,. t ook 130 Fir.t p,;""" at Onta~ Fall Show Ii in 1887. ~ 0¥er 10,CXJO ladies have writte(· t o say that it s urp:tsscs any yea....t cv£r u:;cd by them. Ifi makes the llv,hte·t, whites' sweetest bread, foils, bun~ a u bud·wheat pancak~s. nukcrs iu nearly ~very t<>wn{ _ ff 'tl; ,· . MRS. IVES IJ.!:!:ii!!Yii:!ll!ICPR~C'lEC F~~t. CENTS.\ Bvwmanvillo, lllal'illl l~ lSSS. 12 ' ~1-!Na1~,·~~ll ;:..~ 4~ ·::::J!t }t-~..~?'.ijt\t !~ . ,;;, 4( . ,;(..>:\'l!ft .....'.;, .r.1!;>-1 ""·"